
The President of the United States
in the name of The Congress
takes pleasure in presenting the
Medal of Honor
to
*ROBINSON, JAMES E., JR.
Rank and Organization:: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army,
Battery A, 861st Field Artillery Battalion, 63d Infantry Division. Place and Date
Near Untergriesheim, Germany, 6 April 1945. Entered Service at: Waco, Tex. Birth:
Toledo, Ohio. G.O. No.: 117, 11 December 1945.
Citation:
He was a field artillery forward observer attached to Company A, 253d Infantry, near
Untergriesheim, Germany, on 6 April 1945. Eight hours of desperate fighting over open
terrain swept by German machinegun, mortar, and small-arms fire had decimated Company A,
robbing it of its commanding officer and most of its key enlisted personnel when 1st Lt.
Robinson rallied the 23 remaining uninjured riflemen and a few walking wounded, and, while
carrying his heavy radio for communication with American batteries, led them through
intense fire in a charge against the objective. Ten German infantrymen in foxholes
threatened to stop the assault, but the gallant leader killed them all at point-blank
range with rifle and pistol fire and then pressed on with his men to sweep the area of all
resistance. Soon afterward he was ordered to seize the defended town of Kressbach. He went
to each of the 19 exhausted survivors with cheering words, instilling in them courage and
fortitude, before leading the little band forward once more. In the advance he was
seriously wounded in the throat by a shell fragment, but, despite great pain and loss of
blood, he refused medical attention and continued the attack, directing supporting
artillery fire even though he was mortally wounded. Only after the town had been taken and
he could no longer speak did he leave the command he had inspired in victory and walk
nearly 2 miles to an aid station where he died from his wound. By his intrepid leadership
1st Lt. Robinson was directly responsible for Company A's accomplishing its mission
against tremendous odds.
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